Poetry for Students

(WallPaper) #1
Volume 19 141

mother. Her practice of interspersing Spanish terms
and phrases in her writing, especially notable in
Woman Hollering Creek and Other Stories(1991),
which was written since her move to San Antonio,
stems naturally from her bicultural background.
Cisneros asserted in the 4 August 1991 Chicago
Tribunethat “if you’re bilingual, you’re doubly
rich. You have two ways of looking at the world.”
Again dramatizing the interconnection be-
tween the individual and the community through
her focus on gender in interpersonal relationships,
Cisneros in the twenty-two stories of Woman Hol-
lering Creekexplores the San Antonio setting, con-
trasting the socialization processes of Mexicanas
de éste y el otro lado(Mexican women on both
sides of the border) with those of their Anglo coun-
terparts. The book’s three major sections suggest a
developmental progression from childhood to
adulthood, and the thematic motifs of time, love,
and religion also function as organizing principles.
The experience of cyclical and parallel patterns
of time especially seems to be the collection’s ma-
jor unifying concept, as repeated actions and rites
of passage allow Cisneros to make thematic inter-
connections. Time, for instance, appears as a meta-
physical dilemma in “Eleven.” The experience of
immanence leads the child narrator to explore the
notion of chronology: “when you wake up on your
eleventh birthday you expect to feel eleven, but you
don’t. You open your eyes and everything’s just
like yesterday, only it’s today.” Cisneros’s narra-
tor also views the passage of time in a context of
behavioral expectations: “some days you might say
something stupid, and that’s the part of you that’s
still ten. Or maybe some days you might need to
sit on your mama’s lap because you’re scared, and
that’s the part of you that’s five. And maybe one
day when you’re all grown up maybe you will need
to cry like if you’re three.” Finally, the child un-
derstands that the resolution of the paradox lies in
conceiving time as a process of accretion: “when
you’re eleven, you’re also ten, and nine, and eight,
and seven, and six, and five, and four, and three,
and two, and one.”
In “One Holy Night” the paradox of time is re-
flected in the characterization of Boy Baby, who
“seemed boy and baby and man all at once.” Sim-
ilarly, his refutation of time—“the past and the
future are the same thing”—is set against his pro-
claimed attempt to reenact ancient Mayan ways.
The young female protagonist is told that she will
become “Ixchel, his Queen” after undergoing a rite
of passage, which turns out to be a rape. The expe-

rience is described as a clear-cut separation from
the past: “something inside bit me, and I gave out
a cry as if the other, the one I wouldn’t be anymore,
leapt out.” The irony is underscored when the nar-
rator, now a pregnant teenager who feels suspended
in the present, says, “I don’t think they understand
how it is to be a girl. I don’t think they know how
it is to have to wait your whole life. I count the
months for the baby to be born.” A contrasting view
of time is evident in “Eyes of Zapata,” in which
time becomes destiny. Zapata’s long-standing lover,
Inés Alfaro, states, “I... see our lives, clear and
still, far away and near. And I see our future and
our past, Miliano, one single thread already lived
and nothing to be done about it.”
Parallel temporal paradigms are articulated in
“BienPretty.” According to the narrator, an edu-
cated Latina from San Francisco confused about
her ethnic identity, “we have to let go of our pre-
sent way of life and search for our past, remember
our destinies.” Conversely, her Mexican lover ar-
gues, “You Americans have a strange way of think-
ing about time.... You think old ages end, but
that’s not so. It’s ridiculous to think one age has
overcome another. American time is running along-
side the calendar of the sun, even if your world
doesn’t know it.”
Distraught at discovering that her lover must
return to Mexico to tend to a wife, a mistress, and
seven children, the narrator seeks solace in telen-
ovelas(soap operas). However, she substitutes the
“passionate and powerful, tender and volatile,
brave” women she has known in real life for the
passive models on the screen. As a result, self-con-
fidence returns, and aesthetic pleasure leads her to
focus on the present, her beingin the world: “the
sky is throbbing. Blue, violet, peach, not holding
still for one second. The sun setting... because it’s
today, today; with no thought of the future or past.”
In keeping with the stereotype of the passion-
ate Latina, many of the stories in Woman Holler-
ing Creekrevolve around love, Cisneros’s second
major organizing motif. To the author’s credit,
however, her approach is, for the most part, un-
orthodox. In “One Holy Night” love is defined as
“a bad joke,” as “a big black piano being pushed
off the top of a three story building [while] you’re
waiting on the bottom to catch it,” as “a top...
spinning so fast... all that’s left is the hum,” and
as a crazy man who “walked around all day with
his harmonica in his mouth.... wheezing, in and
out, in and out.” The male lead of “BienPretty” de-
fines love by means of a paradox, “I believe love

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